Marshall v. Clark

22 Tex. 23
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 22 Tex. 23 (Marshall v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Clark, 22 Tex. 23 (Tex. 1858).

Opinion

Wheeler, Ch. J.

This suit was instituted by the appellants [27]*27for a mandamus, to compel the Secretary of State to deliver to the plaintiffs, copies of the Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure, to be by them printed among the general laws of the Sixth Legislature.

The plaintiffs set forth in their petition, that they were elected public printers, by the Sixth Legislature, on the third day after the organization of the two houses; that they gave bond and security for the faithful performance of their duties as such public printers, and that they became thereby entitled to print all the laws of a general nature enacted by the legislature; that the Penal Code and Code of Criminal procedure were enacted at the adjourned session of the legislature, after they had been elected public printers; they set out the substance of the 1st and 3d sections of the Act of September 1st, 1856, concerning the public printing; aver that the Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure, being general laws, they alone are entitled, by virtue of their election and qualification, to print them; and that by virtue of the recited Act of the 1st of September; 1856, the Governor is not authorized to contract for their publication with any one but themselves; that they are ready and willing to print the Codes among the general laws and in a separate volume ; but that the Secretary of State refuses to deliver them copies thereof, as by law it is his duty to do; wherefore, they pray for a mandamus to compel their delivery. A demurrer to the petition was sustained, and the plaintiffs appealed.

It is unnecessary to review all the provisions of the statutes relating to the public printing. They provide for the election of a public printer, whose duty it shall be to print the laws and journals of the legislature, and certain other State papers, at certain fixed prices, and prescribe the manner in which the work shall be done. (See Hart. Dig. p. 825 ; Acts 3d Legislature, 1851, ch. 32, p. 23.) It will suffice to recite the provisions of the Act of the 1st of September, 1856, recited by the plaintiffs in their petition, under which they claim to be entitled to the printing of the Codes. They are as follows : “ That the [28]*28“public printer be and he is hereby required to print, for the “use of the State, fifteen hundred copies of the general laws of “the State Legislature, in addition to the number now required “by law to be printed:” (2,500 was the number previously required,) and “That it shall be the duty of the Governor to contract for and have printed on good paper, and bound in half “leather binding, five thousand copies, in one volume, of the “Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure; which, when “printed and delivered, shall be disposed of as is required in “the distribution of the general laws; and he may also, if neces“sary, appoint a suitable and competent person to correct the “proof sheets, as issued from the press, and to make an index “thereto.” (Acts 6th Legislature, adjourned session, (1856) p. 92.)

The grounds assumed by the appellants, are, that this act did not authorize the Governor to contract for the printing of the Codes with any person but themselves ; and, moreover, that they arc entitled to print the Codes, with the general laws enacted by the legislature. '

It is difficult to perceive the force of the reasoning by which such a construction of the statute is sought to be maintained. The meaning of the legislature seems too plainly expressed to require a resort to construction, or to admit of doubt. Surely, it cannot be supposed the legislature intended so idle a thing as to empower the Governor to contract for the printing and binding of the Codes, and yet to limit him, in making the contract, to one contractor. That would be to defeat the very object for which they conferred the power. The Codes were to be ¡minted and bound in a better and more durable manner than that in which the public printer was required to do his work; and hence it manifestly was intended to empower the Governor to contract for the work where it could be done in the best manner, and upon the best terms. This object would have been defeated by confining the Governor to one workman, with whom to make the contract. He must then have submitted to any terms which that person had seen proper to impose. Such, mani[29]*29festly, was not the intention of the legislature. There is as little reason to suppose the legislature intended to have the Codes printed by the public printer, with the general laws, and also in a separate volume. The act requires the printing of fifteen hundred copies of the general laws, in addition to the number theretofore required, which was twenty-five hundred. Dour thousand copies of the general laws, then, were to be printed; and they, at the same time, provide for printing five thousand copies of the Codes. Why publish four thousand copies of the Codes in one form, and five thousand in another ? If nine thousand copies were wanted, it certainly would have been more economical and convenient to have them all printed in one form, though it had been the more durable one, in which the five thousand copies were required to be printed. But the Act provides that the five thousand copies “shall be disposed of as “ required in the distribution of the general laws.” They were to be distributed and sent by the Secretary of State to the several officers and persons entitled by law to receive the printed laws of the State. (Hart. Dig. Art. 2851, 2358, et seq.) Why furnish the same person two copies, one on common paper, “folded and stitched,” the other on “good paper, and bound “in half leather binding?” Of what use would the copy thus printed with the other general laws be to a person provided with the bound copy ? No such extravagance and folly was intended. Nor are we warranted by the statute in imputing such intention to the legislature. The intention plainly was, to except the Codes out of the printing of the other acts of ordinary legislation; and to have them printed in a separate and more durable form.

But it is insisted, that if such was the intention of the legislature, it was a violation of the contract between the State and the public printer; that the legislature had not the authority to contract for the printing of the Codes with any person other than the public printer. We do not assent to this proposition. The public printer was elected to print for the State the acts and general laws, which it was contemplated would be embraced [30]*30within the scope of ordinary legislation. The constitution had provided that “ within five years after the adoption of this con- “ stitution, the laws, civil and criminal, shall be revised, digested, “ arranged, and published in such manner as the legislature “ shall direct, and a like revision, digest, and publication, shall “be made every ten years thereafter.” (Gen. Prov. Art. 7. Sec. 16.) The Codes constituted a part of the work contemplated by this provision of the constitution ;. and the statutes under which the plaintiffs were elected public printers, did not contemplate the publication by them, in the manner in which they were required to print the laws, journals, messages, reports, &c., or in any other manner, the revised statutes thus provided for by the constitution.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Tex. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-clark-tex-1858.